by Alexia Parks | Dec 5, 2015 | 10 Traits, Article, Leadership Opportunity, United Nations
A call to home to Earth: If the UN Climate Conference in Paris were held in space, delegates would align as ONE as they remember that we are all citizens and stewards of Spaceship Earth. In this YouTube video, astronauts from around the world share their love of Planet Earth and their desire for a treaty in Paris that reflects a rapid shift to sustainability, and a new way of living on Earth to make sustainability long lasting and enduring....
by Alexia Parks | Dec 2, 2015 | 10 Traits, Article, Leadership Opportunity, United Nations
Paris – COP21: President Barack Obama won standing applause at COP21 when he stated that parts of the global warming deal being negotiated in Paris should be legally binding on the countries that sign on. These are fighting words, reports the AP, because it could set up a potential fight with Republicans at home. —My response to the Associated Press news report is this: Does approval of the UN treaty by the U.S. Congress really matter any more? If the weight of public opinion is strong enough, “We the People” have the right to VOTE the nay-sayers out of office in Election 2016. —In addition, this is not the only time that the U.S. Congress has been unable, or unwilling, to “do the right thing” when it comes to collaboration on a global scale. For example, in 1995, the U.S. signed but Congress never ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. In its isolation, by refusing to ratify the treaty, it remains the ONLY country in the world that refuses to recognize the human rights of children. In Paris, the focus will be on securing a global CLIMATE TREATY. Here are three reasons why I believe it will happen. 1.) President Barack Obama has made it his legacy project; 2.) More than 500 institutions representing over $3.4 trillion in assets have made some form of divestment commitment from fossil fuels; 3.) And, like it or not, on a world stage, actions by the GOP-Led Congress are only a minor sideshow. As the first accredited blogger for the UNFCCC (Bali-2007), I personally witnessed and wrote about the *obstructionist*...
by Alexia Parks | Nov 27, 2015 | 10 Traits, Article, Leadership Opportunity, United Nations
#Awesome. Inspiring. Ambitious. Keep an eye on Paris this Sunday. ART from the HEART will light up the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Created by artist Naziha Mestaoui, the series of images call for forest protection and a 100% renewable energy future will be projected onto the facade of Paris’s most iconic landmark. Artists and musicians are coming together to light up the heart of the world. The goal: to engage citizens around the globe to help drive delegates to an ambitious global deal on climate change. The installation “1 Heart 1 Tree” will run from Nov 29 to Dec 4, during the UNFCCC talks in Paris (#COP21), “as a hopeful, optimistic celebration of climate solutions and the power of individual...
by Alexia Parks | Nov 20, 2015 | 10 Traits, Article, Leadership Opportunity, United Nations
Women have a critical role to play in achieving a global treaty at United Nations COP21 in Paris, says Maria Ivanova. She writes: “Studies show that collective intelligence rises with the number of women in a group. Engaging a critical mass of women is linked to more progressive and positive outcomes and to more sustainability-focused decision-making across...
by Alexia Parks | Nov 9, 2015 | Article, Leadership Opportunity
On the phone, her voice sounded calm, light, almost light-hearted. “I feel safe from them in here.” Jan Hamilton was describing her life as an inmate in POD-C at the Park County Jail in Fairplay, CO. A senior, diagnosed with cancer, she was placed in the small, bone chilling cell – as she puts it – “to die.” The door to her cell has a four by 10-inch slot that offers a view of the women’s dining hall. One of the inmates had threatened her life, so she was placed in insolation, she was told, for her own safety. “There are 20 inmates in this section. Most are lesbians.” In a hand-written letter, she described the conditions of her cell. Reading it, it seemed almost as if she was giving Rachel Maddow and Sally Kohn a guided tour of her small cell along with a team of investigators: including a lawyer from Human Rights Watch, someone from the Elder Abuse hotline, and a senior official from the Colorado Department of Corrections. “My bed is sheet metal. There is no heat, I have only two thin blankets to keep me warm, and I’ve spent 10 days and nights in the same bloody clothes. In the middle of the cell is “a 14 inch drain is filled with stagnant contaminated sludge where bugs come and go 24/7.” Could Hell be worse? When Jan was transferred from her hometown of Aspen – where she had spent most of her adult life – to Fairplay, she realized that it could be a one-way journey. As she tells it: “Officer Bird, who locked up my cancer...
by Alexia Parks | Nov 7, 2015 | 10 Traits, Article
When a U.S. team of scientists at the University of Pennsylvania broke the news that men and women’s brains were “hardwired differently,” I received a flood of congratulatory emails from family and friends who congratulated me with praise similar to that offered to a mother announcing the birth of a new child. The most compelling was from my grandson, now a junior at Stanford, who was the first to send me the news link, via text message. It was especially poignant because I had given him a copy of my report: Hardwired – The 10 Major Traits of Women That Can Save the World, based on what I called “The New Science of the Woman’s Brain,” when it first came out, 18 months ago. Now vindicated by a team of scientists who did brain scans of over 1,000 men, women, boys and girls, I feel a bit like a trailblazer who now gets to move to the front of the parade. This science-based validation of my work, and my grandson’s text message, gives me hope. Until now, he had never read my book. And over the past year, my public talks have attracted only a handful of people from academia and science including a former president of Babson College, who pronounced it “Terrific! Powerful!” and a medical doctor who proclaimed: “I have attended 100′s, if not 1,000′s of presentations, and this was one of the best!” Now on the threshold of a new era, we are entering the DMZ, a safe zone between the Age of Competition and the Age of Collaboration, where men and women are discovering what I have been saying all along:...